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A Synergistic Enhancement Strategy for Realizing Ultralong and Efficient Room-Temperature Phosphorescence.

Zhi-Yuan ZhangWen-Wen XuWen-Shi XuJie NiuXiao-Han SunYu Liu
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
An enhancement strategy is realized for ultralong bright room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP), involving polymerization between phosphor monomers and acrylamide and host-guest complexation interaction between phosphors and cucurbit[6,7,8]urils (CB[6,7,8]). The non-phosphorescent monomers exhibit 2.46 s ultralong lifetime after copolymerizing with acrylamide. The improvement is due to the rich hydrogen bond and carbonyl within the polymers which promote intersystem crossing, suppress nonradiative relaxation and shield quenchers effectively. By tuning the ratio of chromophores, a series of phosphorescent copolymers with different lifetimes and quantum yields are prepared. The complexation of macrocyclic hosts CB[6,7,8] promote the RTP of polymers by blocking aggregation-caused quenching, and offsetting the losses of aforementioned interaction provided by polymer. Multiple lifetime-encoding for digit and character encryption are achieved by utilizing the difference of their lifetimes.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • light emitting
  • energy transfer
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular dynamics
  • water soluble